I've been combing the web just about every hour waiting for the clever person who is going to figure this out to post the how-to. So far no luck and I've only seen it mentioned in a thread here and no actual exclusive thread for it. Is anyone here besides me working to try to figure this one out? I KNOW Oscar is freaking a lot of people out, c'mon, someone has to have an idea. Share.

K2 uses Linux for its OS... I'd be willing to bet that there will be a hack soon.

I asked Amazon in an e-mail when we would have the ability to have custom screensaves, they sent me this in reply:

Quote:

Thank you for writing Amazon.com Kindle support.

Adding your own customer screen savers would be considered an alteration and would void your warranty. The Kindle limited warranty applies only to hardware components of the Device that are not subject to accident, misuse, neglect, fire or other external causes, unauthorized use, alterations or repair, or commercial use.

I hope you found this information helpful. Our goal is to help you get the most out of your Kindle experience. If you need further assistance, please contact customer support at 1-866-321-8851.

Thank you for choosing Kindle. Enjoy!

Personally, I would like to know what color the sun is in their world.

Using their logic, isn't adding books to the Kindle also an "alteration"?

I would dearly love to see what happens if they actually deny someone's warranty claim based on that, they wouldn't stand a chance in court OR arbitration...

K2 uses Linux for its OS... I'd be willing to bet that there will be a hack soon.

I asked Amazon in an e-mail when we would have the ability to have custom screensaves, they sent me this in reply:
{snip}

I suspect they misunderstood your question. Their response refers to hardware changes. I think they were thinking that you were referring to one of those clear plastic sheets that you stick on screens to save them from scratches. You know, something like this:http://www.amazon.com/iKross-Premium...5787434&sr=8-1

I suspect they misunderstood your question. Their response refers to hardware changes. I think they were thinking that you were referring to one of those clear plastic sheets that you stick on screens to save them from scratches. You know, something like this:http://www.amazon.com/iKross-Premium...5787434&sr=8-1

Well, that's just it...

Read their response again... they clearly were responding to my question, by quoting something entirely inappropriate! It's not that they didn't understand the question, it's that they really don't understand anything!

They appear to believe that they are somehow justified in denying warranty claims based on that sort of "alteration". I suspect that if push came to shove a judge would have no hesitation in disabusing them of that notion...

That's typical of the kind of tech support email responses you get, they're canned responses, nobody really cared enough to actually reply to your question, they just sent out the closest possible canned reply. If putting different images on the Kindle for the slideshow (Screensaver, whatever) voids the warranty it'd be pretty freaking stupid. You can return it back to normal by flashing the firmware and how would they know you changed anything? Nah, those kinds of replies don't mean anything.

"Amazon.com Customer Service does not support or provide instructions for adding custom images to your Kindle to be used as screen savers. However, should you choose to do this on your own it will not void your warranty."

I too feel the old Kindle 1 way is better; Not all users know how to use photoshop to dither their screensaver images. Of course, it is even better if Amazon just build real support for customer selected screensavers. The old way is really just easter egg from the dev since Amazon never include how to do it its Kindle User Guide.